Karharbari beds in India, so that the Ilawkesbury-Wiananiatta beds come, 
naturally, opposite the Damnda-Pancliet Groups. 
(49.) 1881. Feistmantel (Dr. 0.) The Fossil Flora of the Gondwana System, Vol. III. 
Parts 2 and 3 : The Flora of the Dxmuda and Panchet Divisions. Palaoniologia indica, 
Ser. XII. Paris 2 and 3. 
In the general remarks of this work (pp. 129-132) I also discussed 
the relations of the Indian coal llora to the Australian, especially to that 
of the Newcastle beds. 
(50.) 1879—1880. Hector (Dr. James) On the Geological Formations of New Zealand 
compared with those in Australia. Journ, and Proc. Boy. Soc. N. S. Wales, Vol. XI II, 1879, 
'pp. 05, Sfc. 
(51.) 1882. Cruttwell (Alfred) Note on Dr. Hector’s New Zealand Geology. Geological 
Magazine, 1882, Vol. IX, pp. 1 42-143. 
(52.) 1882. Woods (Rev. J. E. Tenison) The Hawkeshury Sandstone. Joum.and Proc. 
Boy. Soc. N. S. Wales, 1882, Vol. XVI, pp. 53, Sfc. 
(53.) 1882. Woods (Rev. J. E. Tenison) A Fossil Plant Formation in Central Queensland. 
Journ. and Proc. Boy. Soc. N. S. Wales, 1882, Vol. XVI., pp. 179, cSfc. 
I shall ([note this paper once more, when the formations of Queens- 
land will be described, but I refer to it here because Mr. Tenison Woods 
gave (p. 1S9) a sequence of the plant-bearing rocks in other parts of 
Australia also. The author describes fossils of the same age as those from 
Port Stephens and Smith’s Creek, near Stroud, in New South Wales, and 
which were not hitherto known, from Queensland ; they come from near 
Bobuntungen,* in the Drummond Range. 
(54.) 1883. Woods (Rev. J. E. Tenison) Cn the Wianamatta Shales. Journ. and Proc. 
Boy. Soc. X. S. Wales, 1883, Vol. XVII, pp. 75, cjc. 
(55.) 1883 Woods (Rev. J, E. Tenison) Cn the Fossil Flora of the Coal Deposits of 
Australia. Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales, 1883, Vol. VIII, Part 1, pp. 35-1G7, 11 Plates. 
This is an extensive Memoir, written especially with the intention 
to enlarge and complete my own publications on the Australian ITora, 
and to place within the reach of Australian students not only what relates 
to Australian coal plants but also a general view of their scientific classi- 
fication. 
Mr. Tenison Woods has given a classification of the Australian 
plant-bearing strata (pp. 51-58), which, however, is not, I think, in all its 
points quite correct. 
* This is as Tenison Woods writes it; on the map, attached to the “Catalogue of Exhibits,” 18S6, 
(London), I find written — Bogantungen. 
